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The 2026 bow class draws a hard line: speed is great, but fast, simple tuning is what saves time and stacks tight groups. We sat down and compared the biggest launches head to head—Hoyt’s new XTS tuning system, PSE’s redesigned FDS cam and blazing Sicario, Matthews’ all-new ARC series, and the return-to-form feel of Prime’s Divide lineup—using real shop results, paper tears, and range impressions that match what hunters actually see.
We start with the industry’s pivot toward pressless, micro-adjust solutions. Hoyt finally brings a robust on-bow system with XTS for true micro left-right and even vertical tweaks, while still keeping shims for big corrections. PSE doubles down on carbon performance: the Sicario is shockingly smooth for a 5.25-inch brace height speed bow, and the Mach 33 with FDS might be the best blend of forgiveness and pace for everyday bowhunters. Matthews rebuilt the platform with lighter aluminum risers, integrated SCS, and a new cam that delivers real-world speed; swap to the SWX Z mod and the valley becomes far more livable with only a small hit to fps.
We also unpack where accessories make or break a build. Matthews still leads integration and balance, Hoyt owns durability in the backcountry, and PSE’s carbon lineup remains the lightest way to carry serious performance. Prime’s Divide 31 and 33 feel excellent on standard mods, even if they trail a touch in speed, and Expedition’s Next Light delivers carbon-like carry weight at aluminum pricing with quarter-inch draw steps and ABB strings out of the box. Finally, we rank categories by need: raw trajectory (Sicario), forgiving killer (Mach 33 FDS), indestructible rig (RX10 Ultra), polished ecosystem (ARC with SWX Z), and easiest self-tuning (Bowtech DeadLock).
Ready to pick your lane—speed, forgiveness, or durability? Press play, then tell us your top three, what you’re buying now, and whether you’re waiting on ATA to see Bowtech’s cards. If this helped, follow the show, share it with a bow buddy, and leave a quick review so more archers can get dialed faster.
🏹 Shop Extreme Outfitters for all of your archery & bowhunting needs: https://extremeoutfitters.com
Quick reads, pro tips, and the latest episodes—delivered straight to your inbox every week.
👉 Sign up here: https://thearcheryproject.com/
✅ Watch the video podcast here!
https://www.youtube.com/@thearcheryproject
JOIN OUR COMMUNITY:
► Facebook: http://bit.ly/44UD7Vo
► Instagram: http://bit.ly/40Q2jLf
By Zakk Plocica5
77 ratings
The 2026 bow class draws a hard line: speed is great, but fast, simple tuning is what saves time and stacks tight groups. We sat down and compared the biggest launches head to head—Hoyt’s new XTS tuning system, PSE’s redesigned FDS cam and blazing Sicario, Matthews’ all-new ARC series, and the return-to-form feel of Prime’s Divide lineup—using real shop results, paper tears, and range impressions that match what hunters actually see.
We start with the industry’s pivot toward pressless, micro-adjust solutions. Hoyt finally brings a robust on-bow system with XTS for true micro left-right and even vertical tweaks, while still keeping shims for big corrections. PSE doubles down on carbon performance: the Sicario is shockingly smooth for a 5.25-inch brace height speed bow, and the Mach 33 with FDS might be the best blend of forgiveness and pace for everyday bowhunters. Matthews rebuilt the platform with lighter aluminum risers, integrated SCS, and a new cam that delivers real-world speed; swap to the SWX Z mod and the valley becomes far more livable with only a small hit to fps.
We also unpack where accessories make or break a build. Matthews still leads integration and balance, Hoyt owns durability in the backcountry, and PSE’s carbon lineup remains the lightest way to carry serious performance. Prime’s Divide 31 and 33 feel excellent on standard mods, even if they trail a touch in speed, and Expedition’s Next Light delivers carbon-like carry weight at aluminum pricing with quarter-inch draw steps and ABB strings out of the box. Finally, we rank categories by need: raw trajectory (Sicario), forgiving killer (Mach 33 FDS), indestructible rig (RX10 Ultra), polished ecosystem (ARC with SWX Z), and easiest self-tuning (Bowtech DeadLock).
Ready to pick your lane—speed, forgiveness, or durability? Press play, then tell us your top three, what you’re buying now, and whether you’re waiting on ATA to see Bowtech’s cards. If this helped, follow the show, share it with a bow buddy, and leave a quick review so more archers can get dialed faster.
🏹 Shop Extreme Outfitters for all of your archery & bowhunting needs: https://extremeoutfitters.com
Quick reads, pro tips, and the latest episodes—delivered straight to your inbox every week.
👉 Sign up here: https://thearcheryproject.com/
✅ Watch the video podcast here!
https://www.youtube.com/@thearcheryproject
JOIN OUR COMMUNITY:
► Facebook: http://bit.ly/44UD7Vo
► Instagram: http://bit.ly/40Q2jLf

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